Unemployment hearing sheds light on former deputy’s sudden departure

Lt. Eric Nation was subject of employment investigation at time of resignation

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“We do not need to get into all the grim details of what you folks were looking into,” Administrative Judge Timberland said in the hearing. “But I do need to have an idea of what the allegations were, at that time, being investigated. What were they?”

Halferty told the judge that DCI was investigating “allegations of Eric’s misconduct in how he utilized county property … as it related to female contacts or informants, and activities that he may have been doing with them that were not legal or authorized.”

Nation then told Timberland he had resigned after being interviewed for nearly 90 minutes May 17 by DCI investigators at the Jasper County Sheriff’s Office. He said he consulted a lawyer before resigning eight days after the interview.

In an interview with the Daily News, DCI Assistant Director Paulson confirmed her agency’s involvement.

“We did conduct an investigation regarding some allegations of official misconduct regarding Lt. Nation,” Paulson said. “That investigation has been completed, and the case file has been referred to the Iowa Attorney General’s Office for their review. As a result of their review, there were no charges filed.”

Details about Nation’s acts with informants and possible misuse of Jasper County property still are not part of the public record. When asked about testimony at the hearing, Balmer and Halferty declined further comment.

Also during the unemployment hearing, Nation, Halferty and Balmer stated under oath that the former lieutenant had been the subject of a Department of Human Services investigation about two months before he resigned. The allegations were eventually deemed unfounded, but Halferty testified in the hearing he had approached Nation and admitted to being the mandatory reporter.

“On completion of that DHS investigation, Eric felt that he knew who the mandatory reporter was and was very understandably upset about it,” Halferty said in his testimony. “And in order to try to help with the whole situation, I had a meeting with him, and I informed him that I was actually the mandatory reporter. We don’t normally tell the alleged person who the mandatory reporter was, but I felt that it was best for me to reveal to him that I was the one who received information and that I was the reporter. So we discussed that at length.”

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